The movie begins in a strong feminist current. Queen
Christina, who is given to wearing manly clothes, is a forceful and capable ruler who clearly needs no man, either for
counsel or romance. Her court wants her to marry the national war hero Karl
Gustav, and the scheming Count Magnus is never far away, but she insists, “I
shall die a bachelor!” The only person she truly has an interest in is another
woman, the dainty and girlish Countess Ebba Sparre. When she finds out that
Ebba has a lover whom she wishes to marry, Christina flies into a jealous rage
and heads out into the country with only her footman.
Here, the movie abandons its subversive feminist, bisexual
and cross-dressing themes and veers toward conventional territory. Posing as a
man while on the road, Christina ends up sharing a room and bed with the
Spanish envoy Don Antonio. When it’s time to disrobe, her secret is out and the
two fall passionately in love. Later, Christina walks around the room, running
her hands over and pressing her face against various objects in order to
memorize this glorious place where she found a man. Queen Christina has become
a man’s woman.
Just when it seems the film has abandoned its more
challenging themes--Christina has abdicated her throne in favor of setting up
house with Don Antonio--the unexpected happens. Count Magnus mortally wounds Don
Antonio in a duel. Christina arrives on the deck of the ship that was to carry
them to Spain only to find her lover gasping out his final breaths. Christina
declares the ship will set sail despite his death, and the movie ends with
Christina at the bow, looking boldly out across the waves, a content smile
upon her lips. Now for the first time in her life, she is truly free of men and
ready to make her own destiny.
In its unrelenting ending, Queen Christina succeeds where
other texts fail. Watching the 1970 movie of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre
(starring George C. Scott as Mr. Rochester), it occurred to me that in many of
these old tales by women writers, the extraordinary female protagonist who supposedly
needs no man often ends by marrying a man of wealth. Apparently, every good
woman needs recognition as such by a man of considerable means and, in the
movies at least, a man who also happens to have brooding good looks.
Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is another example.
Throughout the whole book, we are told that Elizabeth is intelligent,
independent and generally superior to all those frivolous women who only bother
their heads with finding a man to marry. But, of course, she ends up marrying
Mr. Darcy. In Joe Wright’s 2006 movie, which is otherwise excellent, these two
sober heads suddenly, in the final moments of the film, become giggly dipshits!
Queen Christina avoids this betrayal of the ideals at its
core.
But there are limits to Queen Christina’s feminism. What are
we to make of her penchant for dressing as, and even pretending to be, a man?
Is she proving how even a woman should be able to do anything she pleases? Or
does she feel that a woman cannot be equal as a woman but only by becoming a man? And
what of her obsessive rejection of men early in the film? Can she not realize
herself as a woman except through rejection of men? There is an awful lot of man
in this formulation of woman.
But perhaps these limitations cannot be avoided. After all,
to be human is to be male, female or intersexual, and to exist in matrices of
gender identity. The one thing you cannot do is avoid the male/female polarity
altogether. Therefore, any feminist message must fall within the broader context
of human biology and sexuality.
Finally, we must consider that Queen Christina’s feminism is
limited because it is not the whole story--the movie’s stronger push is for
individualism. Queen Christina simply wishes, beyond any aspirations of female
empowerment, to be herself. Like the historical Queen Christina of Sweden, she
refuses to be bound by convention.
Watching Queen Christina, I couldn’t help but feel that this
role suited Greta Garbo more than any other I have seen her in--and indeed, the
documentary Garbo by Turner Classic Movies draws connections between the themes
in Queen Christina and Garbo’s life. Garbo is always so herself that many roles
don’t seem to fit her, but she and Christina fit seamlessly, and the
result is entertaining and thought-provoking cinema.
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